The library system is moving to a new mobile app! The current library mobile app will not be available after February. This only relates to the library’s mobile app (used on phones and tablets). You can still connect to the library through your desktop, laptop, or mobile device’s web browser at https://ssf.bibliocommons.com/ Projected date for the new mobile app is March. We apologize for the inconvenience

A mythical village based on times to be laughed at and not forgotten. Genius art. Don't miss her biographical graphic works (Fun Home and Are You My Mother?)
A mythical village based on times to be laughed at and not forgotten. Genius art. Don't miss her biographical graphic works (Fun Home and Are You My Mother?)
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A mythical village based on times to be laughed at and not forgotten. Genius art. Don't miss her biographical graphic works (Fun Home and Are You My Mother?)
A mythical village based on times to be laughed at and not forgotten. Genius art. Don't miss her biographical graphic works (Fun Home and Are You My Mother?)
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If you're looking for charm and weirdness with plot, this is the strip for you. Set in Austin, TX sometime in the past.
If you're looking for charm and weirdness with plot, this is the strip for you. Set in Austin, TX sometime in the past.
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Phil Frank wrote a strip about a mythical version of the Bay area called Farley, where Bears were rabid Giants fans. He was a Marin County resident who o...Show more
Phil Frank wrote a strip about a mythical version of the Bay area called Farley, where Bears were rabid Giants fans. He was a Marin County resident who once featured one of my co-workers in a cartoon. "He had a charismatic personality that made everybody like him," said D.J. Puffert, president of the Sausalito Historical Society. "Most of all, he had an internal honesty. He really cared about people and what they were doing."
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Phil Frank wrote a strip about a mythical version of the Bay area called Farley, where Bears were rabid Giants fans. He was a Marin County resident who o...Show more
Phil Frank wrote a strip about a mythical version of the Bay area called Farley, where Bears were rabid Giants fans. He was a Marin County resident who once featured one of my co-workers in a cartoon. "He had a charismatic personality that made everybody like him," said D.J. Puffert, president of the Sausalito Historical Society. "Most of all, he had an internal honesty. He really cared about people and what they were doing."
Show less